3.8 Article

Effects of Sorghum Grain and Wort Composition on Dry Grind Fermentation Performance: A Model for Baijiu Production

Journal

BEVERAGES
Volume 9, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/beverages9020029

Keywords

baijiu; ethanol; fermentation; glucose; Sorghum bicolor; starch; wort

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The fermentation performance of 11 commercial sorghum cultivars for ethanol production was investigated. It was found that cultivars with high-starch and low-protein grains were the most suitable for fermentation, resulting in high ethanol content and fermentability.
Sorghum grain is the principal raw material for Baijiu production, but the effects of grain and wort composition on fermentation performance are unclear. Ethanol production at laboratory scale using grains of 11 commercial sorghum cultivars from a field trial was investigated using dry grind fermentation. Initial wort glucose content was 141-150 g/L and fermentability (glucose-to-ethanol conversion rate) was 87-90%. Ethanol production rate among sorghum genotypes ranged from 1.18 to 2.04 mL of ethanol per litre wort per hour of fermentation. The cultivars were categorised into four groups according to a fermentation endpoint of 60-69 h, 70-79 h, 80-89 h and >90 h. All but one of the sorghums produced a final ethanol content of 9.47-9.76% v/v. Cultivars with high-starch and low-protein grains were the most suitable for fermentation due to the high final ethanol content and fermentability achieved. Initial wort glucose content and yeast assimilable nitrogen content were not correlated with grain starch content, protein content, ethanol content, fermentability, ethanol production rate or glucose consumption rate. Knowledge of the effects of sorghum grain quality on fermentation performance can pave the way for further research to optimise solid-state fermentation for Baijiu production.

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